Since the beginning, and when the plans were approved for submission, whenever the Council of Bishops and the Commission on A Way Forward discussed or approved the plan, it was called the Traditionalist Plan.

But when the Plan was actually submitted by an individual clergy person in June 2018, the name changed, seemingly without Council of Bishops’ authorization, though a name change is noted in their July 8 petition to the Judicial Council. According to court-submitted documents, it was renamed “The Traditional Plan.”

We know the Wesleyan Covenant Association was “in” on the name change because they submitted a modified version of the Traditional Plan and named it as such. The inside track of their knowledge is very easy to discern: they admitted that Commission on A Way Forward member Rev. Thomas Lambrecht co-wrote their legislation, as he was also the clergyperson who submitted the Bishop’s “Traditional Plan” legislation.

Somewhere along the way, someone decided that “Traditionalist” was not the best name for their plan. Given the UMC Bishops did not report a vote to rename the plan, this blog will continue to use the name they voted on.

A Marketing Misstep?

It makes good marketing sense to change the name. “Ist” sounds much harsher (but more honest) than “Traditional.” With only four viable plans before us, caucus groups are making use of many avenues of influence to get people to support their preferred plan.

Unfortunately, marketing is a powerful tool of the Wesleyan Covenant Association, and they are incredibly savvy in a variety of ways to manipulate public opinion of their dominant group:

I was wrong

…from this progressive’s perspective, the OCP is not a progressive plan. It does not move us forward as a denomination—it simply makes official in our polity what our Church currently practices.

When I wrote that, I said the One Church Plan’s allowance of regional diversity just made official what we already were. It was reflective of the church as it was, not a way forward to who we could be.

I was wrong. Upon further inspection, there was another plan that reflected the church as it was, and instead of removing discrimination, it was more of the same condemnation.

More of the same

A little history. Since the first LGBTQ persons came out, Reconciling Ministries Network has a partial list of clergy trials on their website, dating back to Gene Leggett in 1971 before there was even officially language against LGBTQ persons on the books. In every quadrennium since 1996, progressive clergy have been on trial for officiating marriages of their congregants equally, and LGBTQ clergy have been on trial for refusing to divorce their same-gender spouses to keep their jobs. These are a fraction of the actual complaints and (un)just resolutions, many of which conclude without public discussion.

But after every clergy trial, the particular Disciplinary lines under discussion were changed by General Conference. The insertion of “self avowed practicing” came into polity after a clergy complaint was dismissed because there wasn’t a definition of “gay clergy.” Each General Conference became about plugging the leaks so that there was an airtight case against anyone accused of LGBTQ inclusion.

When you know this history, the vast majority of the Traditionalist Plan becomes clear: it is about plugging the leaks and removing mechanisms that have stopped Traditionalists from defrocking or stopping LGBTQ inclusion. From legislation on just resolutions to minimum penalties, it is about removing the roadblocks to complete lockdown against LGBTQ inclusion.

When it comes to LGBTQ inclusion, each General Conference is less about hopeful ideas for the future and more about fixing the polity of the past. By continuing to tighten the polity, they believe the fewer LGBTQ inclusive United Methodists will slip through their fingers. The Traditionalist Plan is more of the same, part of the failed polity that has led us to the precipice. And we really want more of it?

The only novelty

The only novel (by novel, I mean The Handmaid’s Tale is probably the novel they took it from) or new idea for The UMC under the Traditionalist Plan is around the exiting of congregations and expulsion of progressives and LGBTQ-inclusive moderates/conservatives from The UMC. While Rev. David Livingston has documented the many divergences of the Traditionalist Plan from Wesleyanism and United Methodism (1, 2, 3), overall it is more of the same genre of plugging holes and tightening the thumbscrews.

The endgame of the Traditionalist Plan is not a church structured for mission and ministry. It is a church structured for retribution and expulsion. It has lived this reality for many years, it has led us to this conflict we are in today, and the Traditionalist Plan continues that tradition. Why do we want more of the same?

Your turn

For decades, the Church has lived out the Traditionalist Plan of constantly playing “whack a mole” against the Holy Spirit’s inclusive efforts of LGBTQ persons. The Traditionalist Plan is more of the same. It is responsible for the state of disarray the Church is in. It has broken our polity and practices to this point. Do we really want to give it more time? Or is it time for something new?

Comments

“For decades, the Church has lived out the Traditionalist Plan of constantly playing “whack a mole” against the Holy Spirit’s inclusive efforts of LGBTQ persons.” If there is such a thing as the “Holy Spirit”, a mythology I would highly discount. It has long ago washed its hands of ANYTHING to do with the organized Methodist Church. From the General Conference’s comments over the years on women, blacks, native-Americans. Pleeeeeze.. Even if some such entity exists, the history of this church, in fact, MOST mainline Churches (Catholics included) makes it a very suspicious entity indeed.

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